Piano Trio (Bernstein)
Leonard Bernstein's Piano Trio for piano, violin, and cello was written in 1937 while he was attending Harvard University as a student of Walter Piston. He was influenced by the conductor Dmitri Mitropoulos.[1] Several melodic ideas were recycled for use in later pieces. For example, the opening of the second movement was used later by Bernstein in his first musical, On the Town.
Piano Trio | |
---|---|
by Leonard Bernstein | |
The composer in 1944 | |
Performed | 1937 |
Movements | three |
Premiere
The Trio was premiered in 1937 at Harvard University by the Madison Trio: Mildred Spiegel, Dorothy Rosenberg, Sarah Kruskall.[2] It was published by Boosey & Hawkes.[3]
Movements
The Trio is written in three movements:
- Adagio non troppo – Più mosso – Allegro vivace
- Tempo di marcia
- Largo – Allegro vivo et molto ritmico
Awards
In 2000, the Altenberg Trio's recording of this piano trio won the Edison Award in Amsterdam.[4]
gollark: Also lots of cores apparently.
gollark: It's a shame good AMD server stuff is still very expensive.
gollark: Of all the things to segregate, though, memory speed?
gollark: Why, Intel, Why?
gollark: They'll all be shipped with subtly different random configuration, naturally - no comparing allowed.
References
- Music Web Michael Cookson, Review of Piano Trio Anthology, 2006, quote: "Bernstein’s youthful Piano Trio is uneven in quality but it announces significant potential for the improvements that were to quickly come in his career."
- Leonard Bernstein Chamber Music
- Boosey & Hawkes
- "Altenberg Trio Vienna Makes UMS Debut". 26 February 2009. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.